by Richard Linnett on Feb 22, 9:51 AM
Hey, let's watch content on TV tonight! Sounds ridiculous? You bet. Content is an annoying word. We're not talking about photons here. We're talking about shows. Sometimes commercial ideas actually transcend the science of marketing and express thoughts and dreams and real human values and so-called content spins out of it that is more than the sum of branding agendas.
by Lisa Seward on Feb 22, 9:49 AM
One of the key reasons I became a consultant was to help agencies figure out how to reinvent themselves in order to meet the need for modern, media-influenced communications solutions. More and more shops were questioning how to build for the future, usually by some means of getting media and strategy and/or creative to work together more closely, and in my 20 years on the agency side one of my favorite parts of the job was breaking down the walls between those disciplines.
by Joe Mandese on Feb 22, 9:48 AM
The March issue of MEDIA magazine marks the third year in which we have selected a Person of the Year, and at first glance, Stephen Colbert might seem an odd choice. In truth, we thought long and hard before settling on Colbert. In the past we chose people - iGod Steve Jobs in 2006, and inconvenient-truth teller Al Gore in 2007 - whom we believed had the greatest overall impact on the world of media during the preceding 12 months. This year, we are picking Colbert for what he symbolizes: The pseudo nature of modern media's mash-up, faux culture, and …
by Erik Sass on Feb 22, 9:46 AM
Like a Victorian novel, the saga of Arbitron's Portable People Meter (PPM) service for radio ratings goes on and on and on; just when everything seems neatly wrapped up, a new villain emerges - and turns out to be an old villain everyone thought was dead.
by Joe Mandese on Feb 22, 9:45 AM
When it comes to their depictions of the real world, the media have always walked a pretty fine line. Lately, it seems the virtual world may be winning out. It's a progression as old as canvas, vinyl, celluloid or magnetic tape, but the ephemeral and amorphous nature of digital media appears to be pushing the boundaries separating our actual world from our pseudo-societies.
by Staff Writers on Feb 22, 9:42 AM
Do you want the good news or the bad news?
by John Capone on Feb 22, 9:40 AM
Who knows who Stephen Colbert really is? Who really cares? Certainly not Colbert himself. He was once a kid from Charleston, S.C., who grew up Irish-Catholic and graduated from Northwestern University with artistic pretensions. He is now such a muddle of refracted irony - a paradox of self-reference and false sincerity - and the work of teams of writers, that the actor has disappeared completely into the surrealistic world he's created.
by Staff Writers on Feb 4, 1:19 PM
by Lynn Russo Whylly on Jan 31, 1:35 PM
Lifetime television set 160 "Naked" women loose in New York City. Okay, well, they weren't exactly naked. Actually not naked at all. They paraded around the Big Apple by bus and on foot Jan. 3 wearing bathrobes over their seductive winter coats (with hoods, sometimes!) waving their bras and handing out "Happy Nude Year" cards to promote the new reality show How to Look Good Naked hosted by Carson Kressley.
by Gaetano Pollice on Jan 31, 1:34 PM
Magazine editors have it rough. Crotchety by nature and easy prey to the overpriced lunch, they also have the tricky task of pleasing readers and those demanding advertisers with the clenched, er, checkbooks.